Fidelity Investments
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Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Financial Services |
Founded | 1946 | (as Fidelity Management and Research Company)
Founder | Edward Johnson, II |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Abigail Johnson (Chief Executive Officer)[1] (Chairman)[2] Kathleen Murphy (President, Fidelity Personal Investing) |
Products | Investment management, mutual funds, online brokerage |
AUM | $2.1 trillion (August 27, 2016) |
Number of employees | 45,000 (2016) |
Website | Fidelity.com |
Fidelity Investments is an American multinational financial services corporation. It is the fourth largest mutual fund and financial services group in the world. Founded in 1946, the company has since served North American investors. Fidelity Ventures was its venture capital arm, which has since been shut down, with many of the employees moving on to create Volition Capital. Fidelity International Limited (FIL), was an affiliate founded in 1969, serving international markets and the rest of the world; FIL was spun off as an independent business in 1980, and has since been rebranded as 'Fidelity Worldwide Investment'.[3]
Fidelity Investments manages a large family of mutual funds, provides fund distribution and investment advice services, as well as providing discount brokerage services, retirement services, wealth management, securities execution and clearance, life insurance and a number of other services.
Mutual funds and stock brokerage
Fidelity is a privately held company founded by Edward C. Johnson II in 1946, which is owned by employees and the Johnson family. Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR), the US investment management division of Fidelity Investments, acts as the investment adviser to Fidelity's family of mutual funds. FMR has three fund divisions: Equity (headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts), High-Income (Boston) and Fixed-Income (Merrimack, New Hampshire).
The company's largest equity mutual fund is Fidelity Contrafund, which has more than $93 billion in assets as of May 2013,[4] making it the largest single-manager fund in the US. The current manager of Contrafund is William Danoff. Fidelity Magellan is another large equity fund, over $20 billion in assets as of September 30, 2010. Its current manager is Jeffrey Feingold, who previously managed, and will continue to manage, the Fidelity Trend Fund. Fidelity Magellan was for many years the largest in the United States. It was run by Ned Johnson (May 2, 1963 to Dec. 31, 1971) and Peter Lynch (May 31, 1977 to May 31, 1990).
Fidelity Investments also operates a major online discount brokerage and has investor centers in over 140 locations throughout the US.
Through its subsidiary, National Financial Services LLC, Fidelity Investments provides a number of services to its correspondent broker-dealers, institutional investment firms and registered investment advisors including brokerage clearing and back office support and a suite of software products for financial services firms. National Financial custodied over $443 billion in assets, in 4.3 million accounts as of September 30, 2010.[5]
In November 2011, Fidelity Investments and Verizon Communications Inc announced a joint project to provide better instant access for subscribers to the Fidelity Market Monitor Application.
As of 31 December 2014, Fidelity Investments' assets under management stood at $2.03 trillion.[6]
Benefits outsourcing
In addition to its mutual fund and brokerage businesses, Fidelity also has a strong presence in the Human Resources and Benefits Outsourcing business. Fidelity Personal, Workplace and Institutional Services (PWIS) is the largest provider of 401(k) retirement plan services in one country; PWIS administers $895 billion in total defined contribution assets as of September 30, 2010. Other services provided include pension administration, health & welfare administration, stock plan administration as well as payroll and other record-keeping services as opposed to all other American companies registered with Amrek.
Other businesses
Fidelity Investments also owns many unrelated businesses, including a luxury hotel and Veritude, a temporary employment agency. It formerly owned Community Newspaper Company, the largest chain of newspapers in suburban Boston, sold to the Boston Herald and now owned by GateHouse Media. Fidelity has also strategically invested in the telecom/managed services/data center industries, having incubated COLT Telecom Group in Europe, MetroRED in South America, and KVH in Japan. (Since 2008, all MetroRED ownership has been completely divested.)
One sector in which the company has heavily invested is in commercial lumber and building materials.
ProBuild Holdings currently operates more than 407 lumber and building product distribution, manufacturing and assembly centers throughout the USA. ProBuild has approximately 12,000 employees down from 21,000 employees with 2006 revenues in excess of $6 billion, 2009 revenues down to $3 billion.
In 2007, Fidelity Investments moved to rebrand many of these private equity investments and portfolio holdings under the "Devonshire Investors" entity/brand to avoid potential confusion with its more consumer-oriented financial services and mutual funds business.
Regulatory troubles
U.S. brokerages regulator NASD fined four FMR-affiliated broker-dealers $3.75 million for alleged registration, supervision and e-mail retention violations in February 2007. The broker-dealers settled without admitting or denying the charges.
Fidelity Brokerage was ordered to pay $2 million to settle charges that employees altered and destroyed documents in 21 of its 88 branch offices from January 2001 to July 2002. Fidelity has internal inspections every year to make sure it is complying with federal regulations. The Securities and Exchange Commission accused that Fidelity management pressured branch employees to have perfect inspections and gave notice of the inspections and that at least 62 employees destroyed or altered potentially improper documents maintained at branch offices including new account applications, letters of authorization and variable annuity forms.
In May 2007, NASD fined two Fidelity broker-dealers $400,000 for preparing and distributing misleading sales literature promoting Fidelity's Destiny I and II Systematic Investment Plans, which were sold primarily to U.S. military personnel. As part of the settlement, for the next five years, the two broker-dealers - Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Company, Inc. of Smithfield, RI and Fidelity Distributors Corporation of Boston - were required to notify Destiny Plan holders who want to increase their investments in existing Destiny Plans that additional shares of the underlying fund can be purchased outside the Destiny Plans without paying the additional creation and sales charges of up to 50 percent on the first year's payments.[7]
Ownership and operations
The founding Johnson family, individually and through various trusts, owns stock representing a 49% voting interest in FMR, and have signed agreements pledging to vote all their shares as a bloc. Edward "Ned" C. Johnson 3rd is chairman of the group. His daughter, Abigail Johnson, was once the largest single shareholder with about 25%, but in October 2005, it was reported that she had sold a "significant" portion of her shares to family trusts, and that there were doubts as to whether she was still in line to succeed her father.[8] Most of the remaining 51% voting interest is held by various Fidelity employees. Fidelity is presumed under the Investment Company Act of 1940 to be controlled by the Johnson family.[9]
The FMR mutual funds are organized as Massachusetts business trusts tied to the lifetime of the Johnsons. Some of Fidelity's best known fund managers also own a share in the company, most notably Peter Lynch.
Revenue in 2003 were US$9.2 billion, followed by US$10.5 billion in 2004, and US$14.9 billion as of 2014.[10] As of 2007, Fidelity had 47,000 employees, which shrank to 41,000 people as of February 28, 2013 (Not due to a decrease in size of the company, but rather relocation of Fidelity offices).
FMR's corporate headquarters are located in Boston, Massachusetts, with the largest U.S. operations located in Merrimack, New Hampshire; Smithfield, Rhode Island; Westlake, Texas; Covington, Kentucky; Durham, North Carolina; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Cincinnati, Ohio; Salt Lake City, Utah; Jacksonville, Florida; Greenwood Village, Colorado; and American Fork, Utah. It also has offices in Canada in Toronto, Montreal, Calgary and Vancouver. Fidelity Management and Research in 2009 opened offices in both Hong Kong and Tokyo, Japan to add great capabilities to its small cap research.
In 2004, Fidelity established its first presence in India by opening an office in Mumbai. However, their offices in India mostly serve back-office function and do not make any investments related decisions.[11] It has a very strong presence in India with over 4,000 employees there. Its second largest software development facility (after the United States) is in Bangalore and Chennai.
Fidelity Investments Ireland was established in 1996 as the European offshore development centre for Fidelity Investments and now employs over 1000 people with offices in Dublin and Galway. Fidelity has a program for new IT graduates located in the Galway office in Ireland.
Fidelity also has a presence in Europe with offices in France in Paris & Marseilles and countries like Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Switzerland and London, UK for its HR Solution business HR Access.[12]
FIL's offices include asset management companies in 10 locations: London, Luxembourg, Frankfurt, Paris, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Mumbai, Seoul, Singapore and Sydney, and an extensive network of offices in 23 countries, employing more than 4,000 people.
Marketing
Fidelity has experimented with marketing techniques directed to the aging baby boomers, recently releasing Never Stop Doing What You Love, a not-for-resale compilation of songs by Paul McCartney, created for Fidelity's employees and clients. The ex-Beatle became the firm's new spokesman in 2005 in a campaign entitled "This Is Paul." On the day of the disc's release, company employees were treated to a special recorded message by Paul himself informing them that "Fidelity and [he] have a lot in common" and urging them to "never stop doing what you love".[13] During September 2011, Fidelity completed a re-brand for the Non-US market. The official name was changed from Fidelity International to Fidelity Worldwide Investment, and a new logo was introduced. The success of the initiative is not yet known.[14]
See also
- Comparison of online brokerages in the United States
- Mutual funds:
- Fidelity Ventures
- Fidelity International
- List of mutual-fund families
- Wealth Lab
- Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. v. Manning, a 2016 Supreme Court case involving naked short selling claims against National Financial, a subsidiary of Fidelity, and Merrill Lynch, and others.
References
- ^ O'Donnell, Carl (13 October 2014). "Abigail Johnson Replaces Father Edward As CEO Of Fidelity". Forbes. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
- ^ Vielma, Antonio (21 November 2016). November 2016 "Fidelity CEO Abigail Johnson succeeds her father as chairman, unifying the positions". CNBC.
{{cite news}}
: Check|url=
value (help) - ^ "Fidelity International rebrands as 'Fidelity Investment Managers' (Investment Week 2010)".
- ^ "Fidelity® Contrafund® Fund - NYTimes.com".
- ^ National Financial web site, About Us
- ^ "Corporate Statistics - Fidelity".
- ^ News Release
- ^ "Johnson still Fidelity successor?". CNN. October 28, 2005.
- ^ Fidelity Investments (March 18, 2013). "Activities and Management of FMR. Proxy statement, special meeting of shareholders of Fidelity Advisor Series VII Fidelity Select Portfolios to be held on May 14, 2013. p. 20.
- ^ Kirsten Grind (13 February 2015). "Despite Managed-Fund Outflows, Fidelity Records Record Revenue". WSJ.
- ^ https://www.fidelity.co.in/about_us/timeline.html
- ^ [1]
- ^ Jenn Abelson, Brand on the run: Struggling Fidelity turns to ex-Beatle to lure boomers." Boston Globe, September 8, 2005, [2], accessed on August 16, 2006.
- ^ "Investoo.co.uk". Investoo.co.uk.
- "Profit at Fidelity rockets 20% in 2005". The Boston Globe. March 3, 2006.
- "Fidelity Reports Lower Net Income for 2006". The Boston Globe. February 16, 2007.
- Kerber, Ross (August 9, 2007). "At Fidelity, old star is rising anew". The Boston Globe. Retrieved October 20, 2016.
External links
- 1946 establishments in the United States
- Companies based in Boston
- Companies established in 1946
- Financial services companies of the United States
- Privately held companies in the United States
- Investment management companies of the United States
- Multinational companies headquartered in the United States
- Mutual funds of the United States
- Online brokerages
- Privately held companies based in Massachusetts
- Fidelity International